INVESTIGADORES
GOMEZ ZAVAGLIA Andrea
artículos
Título:
Matrix-Isolation, Ragout Jet and Solid State Infrared Spectroscopy Analysis of Aggregation in Nicotinamide and Picolinamide
Autor/es:
A. BORBA, M. ALBRECHT, A. GÓMEZ-ZAVAGLIA, L. LAPINSKI, M. NOWAK, M. SUHM, R. FAUSTO
Revista:
PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY CHEMICAL PHYSICS
Editorial:
Royal Scociety of Chemistry
Referencias:
Lugar: Londres; Año: 2008 vol. 10 p. 7010 - 7021
ISSN:
1463-9076
Resumen:
Aggregation of nicotinamide (3-pyridine-carboxamide; NA) and picolinamide (2-pyridine-carboxamide; PA) has been investigated by matrix-isolation, supersonic jet and neat solid state infrared spectroscopy, complemented by DFT(B3LYP)/6-311++G(d,p) calculations. For both compounds, the most stable dimeric structure was shown to be the centrosymmetric dimer, where two monomers in their most stable forms establish two NH···O=C hydrogen bonds. The most stable structures of monomers of NA and PA were characterized in detail experimentally by matrix-isolation spectroscopy and theoretically (at both the DFT(B3LYP)/6-311++G(d,p) and MP2/6-311++G(d,p) levels). For nicotinamide, two conformers were found in the matrices, with ca. 80% of the total population adopting the E form. Constrains on the vibrational dynamics of the dimers in the gas phase were established by supersonic jet spectroscopy. In PA, the vibrational energy flow out of the N-H stretching mode was shown to be accelerated substantially by the presence of a secondary intramolecular hydrogen bond. In the glassy state of both compounds, the centrosymmetric dimer seems to be the prevalent structure. In the neat crystalline state (KBr pellet), picolinamide keeps this type of dimeric structure as the constituting unit, whereas nicotinamide molecules assume a different arrangement, where one of the NH···O=C bonds is replaced by an NH···N(ring) bond. The different crystallograpic structures which were formed by the compounds are reflected in the vibrational spectra of the solids. These observations are correlated with the molecular properties of NA and PA, in particular with the greater conformational mobility of NA compared with PA. This is ascribable to the absence in the NA molecule of the intramolecular NH···N(ring) interaction, which exists in PA.